Transplantation of gut microbiota derived from patients with schizophrenia induces schizophrenia-like behaviors and dysregulated brain transcript response in mice

IF 5.7 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Nana Wei, Mingliang Ju, Xichen Su, Yan Zhang, Yonghe Huang, Xinyue Rao, Li Cui, Zhibing Lin, Yi Dong
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Abstract

Schizophrenia (SCZ), as a neurodevelopmental disorder and devastating disease, affects approximately 1% of the world population. Although numerous studies have attempted to elucidate the causes of SCZ occurrence, it is not clearly understood. Recently, the emerging roles of the gut microbiota in a range of brain disorders, including SCZ, have attracted much attention. While the molecular mechanism of gut microbiota in regulating the pathogenesis of SCZ is still lacking. Here, we first confirmed the difference of gut microbiome between SCZ patients and healthy controls, and then, we performed fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) to clarify the roles of SCZ patients-derived microbiota in a specific pathogen free (SPF) mice model. 16 S rDNA sequencing confirmed that a significant difference of gut microbiome was present between two groups of FMT mice, which has a similar trend with the above human gut microbiome. Furthermore, we found that transplantation of fecal microbiota from SCZ patients into SPF mice was sufficient to induce schizophrenia-like (SCZ-like) symptoms, such as deficits in sociability and hyperactivity. Furthermore, the brains of mice colonized with SCZ microbiota displayed dysregulated transcript response and alternative splicing of SCZ-relevant genes. Moreover, 10 key genes were identified to be correlated with SCZ by an integrative transcriptome data analysis. Finally, 4 key genes were identified to be correlated with the 12 differential genera between two groups of FMT mice. Our results thus demonstrated that the gut microbiome might modify the transcriptomic profile in the brain, thereby modulating social behavior, and our present study can help better understand the link between gut microbiota and SCZ pathogenesis through the gut-brain axis.

Abstract Image

移植源自精神分裂症患者的肠道微生物群会诱发小鼠的精神分裂症样行为和大脑转录反应失调
精神分裂症(SCZ)是一种神经发育障碍和破坏性疾病,影响着全球约1%的人口。尽管许多研究都试图阐明精神分裂症的发病原因,但人们对这种疾病的了解并不清楚。最近,肠道微生物群在包括SCZ在内的一系列脑部疾病中的新作用引起了广泛关注。然而,肠道微生物群在调控SCZ发病机制中的分子机制仍然缺乏研究。在此,我们首先证实了SCZ患者与健康对照组之间肠道微生物群的差异,然后进行了粪便微生物群移植(FMT),以明确SCZ患者来源的微生物群在无特定病原体(SPF)小鼠模型中的作用。16 S rDNA 测序证实,两组 FMT 小鼠的肠道微生物群存在显著差异,这与上述人类肠道微生物群的趋势相似。此外,我们还发现,将 SCZ 患者的粪便微生物群移植到 SPF 小鼠体内足以诱发类似精神分裂症(SCZ)的症状,如社交障碍和多动。此外,被SCZ微生物群定植的小鼠大脑显示出转录反应失调和SCZ相关基因的替代剪接。此外,通过综合转录组数据分析,确定了 10 个与 SCZ 相关的关键基因。最后,我们还发现 4 个关键基因与两组 FMT 小鼠的 12 个不同种属相关。我们的研究结果表明,肠道微生物组可能会改变大脑的转录组图谱,从而调节社会行为,我们的研究有助于更好地理解肠道微生物组通过肠脑轴与SCZ发病机制之间的联系。
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来源期刊
NPJ Schizophrenia
NPJ Schizophrenia Medicine-Psychiatry and Mental Health
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
44
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: npj Schizophrenia is an international, peer-reviewed journal that aims to publish high-quality original papers and review articles relevant to all aspects of schizophrenia and psychosis, from molecular and basic research through environmental or social research, to translational and treatment-related topics. npj Schizophrenia publishes papers on the broad psychosis spectrum including affective psychosis, bipolar disorder, the at-risk mental state, psychotic symptoms, and overlap between psychotic and other disorders.
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